Elizabeth Warren Ends Presidential Bid
Senator
Elizabeth Warren will end her presidential campaign after a poor showing on
Super Tuesday.
A favourite
of the liberal left, the Massachusetts senator had been a frontrunner in the
Democratic field.
However, Ms
Warren, 70, failed to convert early excitement into votes.
The
Democratic contest to take on President Donald Trump is now seen as a two-horse
race between former Vice-President Joe Biden, 77, and Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders, 78.
Ms Warren's
endorsement will now be highly sought after by both candidates.
Her
departure will clear the path for Mr Sanders in particular, now the sole
progressive candidate left in the race.
With Ms
Warren's departure, a Democratic race that began with a record high of female
candidates is now effectively left to two male front-runners.
The erudite
Ms Warren vaulted into the political arena more than a decade ago as she pushed
for tougher regulation of the financial sector after the 2008 economic
collapse.
She
championed the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau - a
government agency that would serve as a Wall Street watchdog.
In 2010, she
helped the Obama White House set it up.
Two years
later, the former Harvard law professor rode that momentum to a seat in the US
Senate for Massachusetts.
Though her
name was floated as a possible 2016 Democratic nominee, the senator demurred,
saying she was not interested in the top job.
This time
around, Ms Warren was the first major Democratic candidate to announce her
plans for a presidential bid.
Early in the
race, her policy-centric approach - "I've got a plan for that" was a
favourite refrain - seemed effective. In October last year, she led most
national polls.
But by
December 2019, Ms Warren had been pushed back, hurt by a difficult debate where
her rivals hammered her over key policy promises like Medicare for All.
And despite
massive investments in early voting states, Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada, Ms
Warren failed to be a top-two finisher in any - in fact she came third in her
home state of Massachusetts on Super Tuesday.
Her exit
follows closely behind former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg and
billionaire Michael Bloomberg.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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